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Better security may not make schools safer

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As of last week, more than 450 teachers and other school employees from around Ohio had applied for 24 spots in a free firearms training program being funded by the Buckeye Firearms Association foundation.

Ken Hanson, the legal chairman for the association, said the Sandy Hook shooting was the “breaking point,” and the group decided “it’s time to quit talking about it and move forward.”

At the end of the three-day course, participants will be given the same firearms tests administered to law enforcement officers.

“If they can’t qualify, they shouldn’t be carrying a gun,” said John Benner, a former member of the Hamilton County regional SWAT team who owns the Tactical Defense Institute, which is doing the training.

Muschert cautioned against turning schools into armed camps.

“The contradiction with schools is that our risk tolerance is really low, almost zero,” he said. “It’s such an emotional topic that people cannot engage in reasonable conversation and say there’s only so much we can do, and if we keep adding more and more safety measures beyond that it’s not going to help.

“And some of the punitive measures like zero-tolerance policies and police in schools might actually have some negative consequences for many of the students.”

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(Dayton Daily News staff Writer Jill Kelley contributed to this report.)

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